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Lime finally squeezes an opening date out of Landmark

The Landmark development in Greenwood Village is a strange kind of place, a "European-style village," according to its website, springing from the ground like a weird, sci-fi bubble-city in the middle of what used to be a strip-mall-and-office-park nowhere. But not springing up too fast; the project has undergone numerous delays over the past few years, and several restaurants that were supposed to go into Landmark are seriously behind schedule.

Charlie Huang's luxe Chinese spot Jing was one of the first to get up and running. Since it opened last December, it's been a serious cougar-ville where I've listened to music-industry guys talking about beating up members of the press and eaten some nice apps at the ever-crowded bar. The Landmark theater has been doing some trade, too, although the food makes me long for the grub once dished up by Neighborhood Flix. A Hapa Sushi outpost opened on August 4 and is reportedly doing very well — its bottom line helped, no doubt, by sushi deliveries to Landmark residents. There's also a Ted's Montana Grill that always looks empty and a knock-off Irish pub called Slattery's that I wouldn't go in on a bet. But most of the rest of the U-shaped retail stretch comes off like a Potemkin Village with, instead of actual retail and restaurant properties, just the promise of those properties: storefronts closed and locked, their windows covered with pictures of happy people and al fresco dining, and the names of the businesses that will eventually occupy these spaces hung over doorways or sketched onto windows.

That, though, is supposed to be changing soon. Everest Development Co., which is behind the $160 million project, has finally completed the first phase of construction, which included the condo towers and the "retail village" portions of the fifteen-acre complex. And so Curt Sims has scheduled the opening of the Landmark Lime, third in his chain, for November 14. The decision to wait it out was a mutual one between him and the developer, Sims told me. "Based on the development, we tried to figure out the best time to benefit us both."

And the best time was once the towers were actually finished and many of the condos in them occupied (at anything from $600K to $2.5 million), giving businesses in Landmark a base of customers. "It's just common sense," Sims said, adding that even the October 10 opening of Comedy Works South was a nice bump, "driving a couple thousand people on the weekends" and filling up those sidewalks that, until this past month, had always seemed creepily devoid of life. "Now that it's done, there'll be traffic," he concluded. "It's all going to be good."

At least, that's the hope. But Comedy Works owner Wende Curtis included two restaurants with her club — the Southern-inflected Lucy, named after her French bulldog, and Lila B, the house bar, lounge and small-plates spot — precisely in hopes that she could keep those people in her place a little longer and the money in-house. She brought in chef Jeff Stoneking (who worked under Michael Mina in L.A.) to design Lucy's menu, and exec sous Frank Mnuk (who did time at the French Laundry) to cook it, the two of them offering not just a glancing take on Southern grub, but a serious (and high-tone) exploration that quickly devolves into a pasta-and-fusion board. There's grits with andouille sausage and tasso ham, pork belly with black-eyed peas and pickled mustard seed, then tuna with yuzu vin, duck confit with spaetzle and Tabasco-spiked short ribs with sweet onion jus. Lila B goes sorta the same way: beignets and sliders, lobster cappuccino, lobster corn dogs, confit spring rolls, and foie with port gastrique-braised cherries and chocolate mole — which scared me when I read it, but I will withhold judgment until I get a taste.

The partners from Jet Entertainment Group have dibs on a Landmark slot for their eleventy-seventh recent concept, Pizza Republica, with a January date on the books. And even Markus and Clemens Georg, the brothers behind Chinook (which left its longtime Cherry Creek location prematurely), are looking at opening soon, though they haven't yet set a date. So some day in the not-so-distant future, the question will turn from when Landmark will start to get some life into these storefronts into how it will find enough bodies to fill the dozen or so restaurants crammed in side by side. Because seriously? I've been there on Wednesday and Thursday nights (when places like Hapa stay open until midnight in anticipation of late-night trade) and have seen completely vacant sidewalks at 8 p.m.

According to Sims, that shouldn't be the case much longer. He's seeing move-ins every day as the condos start to fill, he told me. And every one of those move-ins is another captive customer who everyone involved hopes will never want to leave his little, imaginary European-style village for anything.

Leftovers: In the very real LoDo, Pizzeria Mundo (1312 17th Street) has had a run of bad luck. Most recently, the pizza joint has been rendered more or less invisible by construction scaffolding and tarps. I got manager and partner Josh Mason on the blower last week, and he told me that the mess has cut their business in "half, maybe more." And as if that weren't bad enough, it doesn't look like the work is going to be done until February or March, at the earliest.

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  • J. Dennis 11/06/2008 5:56:00 PM

    What an inaccurate description of the Landmark Village Shops. Yes, Wednesdays may be slow, but come over on a Friday and Saturday evening and the place is packed. Jing has phenomenal food (who cares who the patrons are) if you like a twist on Asian food, it is superb. The best calamari I have ever had in Denver! The Landmark Theater is very nice--beats the 24 plex with nothing but rowdy teenagers just hanging out in packs. Just because The Landmark is not in downtown Denver, you don't have to go and speak negatively about it. Everyone I see and visit with is totally enjoying what the new and fun development has to offer. With Lime opening up and Pizza Republica, it will just broaden the choices everyone is looking for in this part of the Metro area. Readers--make up you own opinion and don't rely on this poorly written article. J.

  • Lisa B. 11/04/2008 9:07:00 PM

    To the writer: It seems as though you have not actually spent a lot of time at The Landmark Shops because if you had, you would see that this development is exactly what Greenwood Village needed, along with all of the other new developments in the area, and has been extremely crowded everytime I vist. As a lifetime resident of Greenwood Village, and a non-resident of the towers, I take offense to your "ghost town" and "empty streets" comments. It is comments like these, from people like you, that create negative attitudes towards things they have never experienced. And by the way, the foie with cherrys and chocolate at Lila B is delicious, it was nice to see that you held judgement on ONE thing until after you had actually tried it. Next time you should be less careless with your journalism skills and more thoughtful of the positive influence developments like The Landmark make in our community and economy.

 
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